Cargando…

Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone

To date, most in vitro toxicity testing has focused on acute effects of compounds at high concentrations. This testing strategy does not reflect real-life exposures, which might contribute to long-term disease outcome. We used a 3D-human dopaminergic in vitro LUHMES cell line model to determine whet...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Harris, Georgina, Eschment, Melanie, Orozco, Sebastian Perez, McCaffery, J. Michael, Maclennan, Richard, Severin, Daniel, Leist, Marcel, Kleensang, Andre, Pamies, David, Maertens, Alexandra, Hogberg, Helena T., Freeman, Dana, Kirkwood, Alfredo, Hartung, Thomas, Smirnova, Lena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6063347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29955902
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8
_version_ 1783342540071632896
author Harris, Georgina
Eschment, Melanie
Orozco, Sebastian Perez
McCaffery, J. Michael
Maclennan, Richard
Severin, Daniel
Leist, Marcel
Kleensang, Andre
Pamies, David
Maertens, Alexandra
Hogberg, Helena T.
Freeman, Dana
Kirkwood, Alfredo
Hartung, Thomas
Smirnova, Lena
author_facet Harris, Georgina
Eschment, Melanie
Orozco, Sebastian Perez
McCaffery, J. Michael
Maclennan, Richard
Severin, Daniel
Leist, Marcel
Kleensang, Andre
Pamies, David
Maertens, Alexandra
Hogberg, Helena T.
Freeman, Dana
Kirkwood, Alfredo
Hartung, Thomas
Smirnova, Lena
author_sort Harris, Georgina
collection PubMed
description To date, most in vitro toxicity testing has focused on acute effects of compounds at high concentrations. This testing strategy does not reflect real-life exposures, which might contribute to long-term disease outcome. We used a 3D-human dopaminergic in vitro LUHMES cell line model to determine whether effects of short-term rotenone exposure (100 nM, 24 h) are permanent or reversible. A decrease in complex I activity, ATP, mitochondrial diameter, and neurite outgrowth were observed acutely. After compound removal, complex I activity was still inhibited; however, ATP levels were increased, cells were electrically active and aggregates restored neurite outgrowth integrity and mitochondrial morphology. We identified significant transcriptomic changes after 24 h which were not present 7 days after wash-out. Our results suggest that testing short-term exposures in vitro may capture many acute effects which cells can overcome, missing adaptive processes, and long-term mechanisms. In addition, to study cellular resilience, cells were re-exposed to rotenone after wash-out and recovery period. Pre-exposed cells maintained higher metabolic activity than controls and presented a different expression pattern in genes previously shown to be altered by rotenone. NEF2L2, ATF4, and EAAC1 were downregulated upon single hit on day 14, but unchanged in pre-exposed aggregates. DAT and CASP3 were only altered after re-exposure to rotenone, while TYMS and MLF1IP were downregulated in both single-exposed and pre-exposed aggregates. In summary, our study shows that a human cell-based 3D model can be used to assess cellular adaptation, resilience, and long-term mechanisms relevant to neurodegenerative research. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6063347
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Springer Berlin Heidelberg
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60633472018-08-09 Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone Harris, Georgina Eschment, Melanie Orozco, Sebastian Perez McCaffery, J. Michael Maclennan, Richard Severin, Daniel Leist, Marcel Kleensang, Andre Pamies, David Maertens, Alexandra Hogberg, Helena T. Freeman, Dana Kirkwood, Alfredo Hartung, Thomas Smirnova, Lena Arch Toxicol In Vitro Systems To date, most in vitro toxicity testing has focused on acute effects of compounds at high concentrations. This testing strategy does not reflect real-life exposures, which might contribute to long-term disease outcome. We used a 3D-human dopaminergic in vitro LUHMES cell line model to determine whether effects of short-term rotenone exposure (100 nM, 24 h) are permanent or reversible. A decrease in complex I activity, ATP, mitochondrial diameter, and neurite outgrowth were observed acutely. After compound removal, complex I activity was still inhibited; however, ATP levels were increased, cells were electrically active and aggregates restored neurite outgrowth integrity and mitochondrial morphology. We identified significant transcriptomic changes after 24 h which were not present 7 days after wash-out. Our results suggest that testing short-term exposures in vitro may capture many acute effects which cells can overcome, missing adaptive processes, and long-term mechanisms. In addition, to study cellular resilience, cells were re-exposed to rotenone after wash-out and recovery period. Pre-exposed cells maintained higher metabolic activity than controls and presented a different expression pattern in genes previously shown to be altered by rotenone. NEF2L2, ATF4, and EAAC1 were downregulated upon single hit on day 14, but unchanged in pre-exposed aggregates. DAT and CASP3 were only altered after re-exposure to rotenone, while TYMS and MLF1IP were downregulated in both single-exposed and pre-exposed aggregates. In summary, our study shows that a human cell-based 3D model can be used to assess cellular adaptation, resilience, and long-term mechanisms relevant to neurodegenerative research. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2018-06-28 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6063347/ /pubmed/29955902 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8 Text en © The Author(s) 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle In Vitro Systems
Harris, Georgina
Eschment, Melanie
Orozco, Sebastian Perez
McCaffery, J. Michael
Maclennan, Richard
Severin, Daniel
Leist, Marcel
Kleensang, Andre
Pamies, David
Maertens, Alexandra
Hogberg, Helena T.
Freeman, Dana
Kirkwood, Alfredo
Hartung, Thomas
Smirnova, Lena
Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title_full Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title_fullStr Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title_full_unstemmed Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title_short Toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3D dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
title_sort toxicity, recovery, and resilience in a 3d dopaminergic neuronal in vitro model exposed to rotenone
topic In Vitro Systems
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6063347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29955902
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00204-018-2250-8
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisgeorgina toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT eschmentmelanie toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT orozcosebastianperez toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT mccafferyjmichael toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT maclennanrichard toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT severindaniel toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT leistmarcel toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT kleensangandre toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT pamiesdavid toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT maertensalexandra toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT hogberghelenat toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT freemandana toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT kirkwoodalfredo toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT hartungthomas toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone
AT smirnovalena toxicityrecoveryandresilienceina3ddopaminergicneuronalinvitromodelexposedtorotenone